Again I suggest you read the report and not the nonsense that Rosebowl has conjured up. He and that other website tell their hopeless pathetic fans things what they want to hear so they will make money off of them. MSU has had the two of the best seasons in their history and guess what , OM waxed them both years,and they can see the gap widening big time. OM NCAA issues are their only hope to bring their rival down to their level, so their obsession is understandable. Thinking we will get USC type of sanctions shows where you get your information.
Its becoming pretty painfully obvious that you've taken to accusing others of what you are in fact doing, i.e. getting your information solely from a source who panders to Ole Miss fans. Do you realize that Ole Miss has admitted to these violations publically, correct? That they have already 'suggested' substantial penalties in the hopes that it will appease the NCAA?
I get my news from sources like ESPN, USAToday and CBS Sports. Here is a link to one of their stories:
http://www.cbssports.com/college-fo...end-assistants-in-wake-of-13-ncaa-violations/
Now, all of this might be news to you (shocking, I know), but when phrases like 'failure to monitor', 'academic fraud', 'impermissible benefits' and 'provided false or misleading information' are in your list of
self-admitted infractions, you better pucker up. Where is it you get
your information from, exactly, if you consider it better than the above sources and the University's own press release?
And again, this is only the stuff OM will admit to, and they'll only admit to it because its the only stuff they know the NCAA can prove. That's how these 'internal investigations' work; an investigation is done into how much the NCAA knows and how much it can prove so that you can begin putting together your legal defense, not into how much wrong-doing actually occurred because the school already knows all of that. Unfortunately they are also dealing with the fact that one of the central figures in this controversy went on national television and admitted to taking money. Even if that was somehow legit, it puts enormous pressure on the NCAA in the court of public opinion to make an example out of Ole miss, especially given the national perception the SEC has of being cheaters (largely thanks to our friends in the state of Alabama over the years).
The list of violations that USC was penalized for don't come close to what you see spelled out there, what you see
already admitted to there. You'd better hope that Ole Miss only gets USC-level penalties, my friend, because it could end up being a lot worse. As an outside observer, I'm thinking a minimum of 5 scholarships lost for three years (15 total), though 20 over four years or 25 over five years wouldn't be out of the realm of possibility. Add to that 5 years probation and a 2 year postseason ban, likely with a loss of revenue share from the league's post-season payments for those two years... and then of course the requisite loss in evaluation days/official visits, etc. Current players will also likely be given the option of transferring without having to sit out in the wake of these penalties.
Those are very real possibilities and would be right in the realm of the level of misconduct we're seeing here, especially since the program seems intent on keeping coaches ultimately responsible for many of these violations.